A buddy of mine lives most of the year in China, running his US based company's manufacturing operations there. He's got some interesting observations...
For one, he says that overall, the Chinese he knows are the most happy and optimistic people he's ever worked with. Even the ones in lower positions at the factory are eager to come to work every day and want to do the best job they can at whatever they do. They want to gain skills, go to school and improve themselves as much as possible. When he asks for a volunteer to do something extra, he's got smiling faces lining up to help out. They could care less about their country's politics; they just want to make a buck.
At the factory I work in here in the US, It's all I can do to keep some of my employees (if they show up) out of the bathroom and off of their cell phones for two hours a day. If I ask certain individuals to do something extra, it's "not their job."
My highest paid prima donna machinists make ~$24/hr with great benefits and complain they're not making enough. My buddy's top machinists make ~$1.75/hr with minimal benefits and work hard, some while going to school to become engineers, CNC programmers, managers, etc so they can earn more money.
Is it any wonder that they're taking over in manufacturing?
There are only three ways to create large amounts of new wealth; farming, natural resources and manufacturing (everything else is just moving money around). Those are what brought the US into the prosperity we've enjoyed, won wars and built this country.
It should be no surprise that China will be a Superpower shortly. Look for many more Chinese-produced food products on US shelves over the next few years. Believe me, it's coming.
At least the US Navy is still bigger than the navies of the 13 largest others combined. Our current administration is working hard to reduce it though. Good on them, eh?
China is looking to its bright future. We're looking to our glorious past.